Case Number 17119: Small Claims Court

Steam

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All Rise...

Judge Christopher Kulik is steaming like a latte.

The Charge

Or, three fine actresses in one dismal drama.

The Case

Set in suburban New Jersey, Steam focuses on three women and their
current predicaments when it comes to love. They don't know each other, but run
into each other from time to time in the steam room at their local gym.

Doris (Ruby Dee, American
Gangster) is a recent widow who finds herself hounded by the local church to
embrace God. Her loneliness is eventually cleansed by a chance meeting with a
kindly gentleman named August (Dick Anthony Williams, Edward Scissorhands).

Meanwhile, Laurie (Ally Sheedy, The Breakfast Club) is a single
mother in her early 40s who's still hurt by her ex-husband re-marrying a
much-younger woman. Despite the urging of a friend, she feels uncomfortable
asking out her son's football coach, who's in his late 20s. Imagine her
surprise, however, when he pursues her!

Then there's Elizabeth (Kate Siegel, See How They Run), a college freshman who
still feels entrapped by her uber-religious parents. One day, she develops a
serious crush on a sexy party girl named Niala (Reshma Shetty, Royal
Pains). Will she be able to keep it a secret from her parents?

For nearly two hours, we see how these women's lives parallel and the
numerous complications that threaten their relationships. Sounds like a
reasonable escape, except that Steam is too ponderous and protracted to
really embrace.

The major problem is writer-director Kyle Schickner relies too often on
secondhand emotions to carry the story. Another flaw is his heavy-handed
attempts at irony, as he gives each of his three characters a similar road to
travel. In the end, Steam just ends up being obvious and repetitive,
despite Schickner's good intentions.

Thanks to the terrific actresses, however, the film barely stays alfloat.
They give everything they got, which is admirable. Veteran Dee is the most
memorable of the trio, though newcomers Siegel and Shetty are also impressive.
And then there's Sheedy, who retains that low-key sweetness she's had ever since
Wargames. Unfortunately, none of these
ladies can raise Steam above sheer mediocrity.

I can't say for sure what the final product will look like, as Wolfe sent us
a screener that housed only the movie and its trailer. Regardless, the film is
found guilty.